STATE SCHOOLS DIVIDED OVER ASA
In wake of accusations, ASU board members resign while UA leaders work to come to terms

BRITTNY MEJIA
Arizona Daily Wildcat

Each semester, Arizona university
students pay a fee to help fund an
organization that aims to make higher
education more affordable and more
accessible.
However, in the wake of the
resignation of five Arizona Students
Association board members from
ASU and an investigation performed
by the Goldwater Institute, questions
have been raised about what ASA

does with the $2-per-semester fee it backs of students to do pretty much
collects from students.
what the organization does without
having that official organization,”
Naufel said.
According
to
Naufel,
ASA
Mark Naufel, former ASA treasurer threatened to take legal action against
from ASU and president of the those questioning the fee and staff.
undergraduate student government This contributed to the decision of
on the Tempe campus has resigned ASA board members to resign, so they
from ASA, citing his disagreement could speak more freely, Naufel said.
with the organization and concern
“The actions you want to take are
over where the money from student your own, and up to you to decide.
fees goes.
I just want to ensure that you know
“We could create a plan, create the repercussions of each decision
policy departments and do it all off the because I would hate for any of you

Conflict within ASA

to get into legal trouble where neither
the university nor ASA could provide
you with representation,” wrote ASA
Executive Director Casey Dreher in
an email to Naufel.
Three of Naufel’s fellow ASA board
members also resigned, following
the removal of a bylaw requiring
presidents to serve on the board
of directors for ASA. Although the
ASU Tempe senate has not taken a
stance for or against ASA, there will
be a continued investigation into the
necessity of the organization, Naufel
said.

BEAVER DAMNED

Arizona unable to overcome injuries to key players in a 38-35 loss to Oregon State on Saturday at Arizona Stadium

“It would be so nice for U of
A students to look more into the
issue and the facts and talk to your
elected officials about what the best
option is for students,” Naufel said.
“It’s important for U of A students
to do research and question the
organization that they’re paying into.”
Some UA campus leaders have
opened themselves up to conducting
an investigation and working on
making improvements within ASA.
“I am completely open and happy

ASA, 2

Regents
OK UA
budget
proposal
KYLE MITTAN
Arizona Daily Wildcat

TYLER BESH/ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT

SAFETY JARED TEVIS was carried off the field by trainers after spraining his ankle in the first quarter of Saturday’s 38-35 loss to Oregon State. It was a big loss for the Wildcats, as Tevis entered the
game as the Wildcats’ second leading tackler. Converted receiver Patrick Onwuasor replaced him in the lineup for the rest of the game and recorded eight tackles.

Experts: SB 1070 difficult to
enforce without racial profiling

have flexibility in enforcement because of cer- unconstitutional,” Silverman said.
Arizona Daily Wildcat
tain language in the law. The law states that
it is to be enforced “when applicable” and
Almost two weeks after being signed into ef- shouldn’t be enforced if it may “hinder an infect, people are questioning the enforceability vestigation.”
of SB 1070’s “papers, please” provision without
While many people believe racial profiling is
racially profiling.
unconstitutional, Gabriel Chin, a legal scholar
Four sections of the bill were challenged at
and law professor at University of California,
If you’re not going to use
the federal level on preemptive grounds and
Davis, said the U.S. and the Arizona constituonly the “papers, please” provision was upheld
tions have made exceptions for immigration
race, how can you tell by
by the court. Law professors said the law faces
enforcement.
looking at somebody that
further challenges on the grounds of racial proAccording to Chin, both constitutions state
filing.
that race can be taken into account to decide
they’re an undocumented
if “there’s reasonable suspicion to stop someimmigrant? Their clothes?
body on the grounds that they are undocumented.”
What kind of car they’re
“The way the Supreme Court has put it is that
driving?
In order to properly implement the law, offiapparent Mexican ancestry is a factor that can
cers are required to go through training by the
— Omar Vasquez,
be considered to determining whether someArizona Peace Officer Standards and Training
body has unlawfully crossed into the United
UA Latino Law Student
Board.
States,” Chin said.
Association board member
According to Sgt. Juan Alvarez, the public inThe federal court ruling stated that
formation officer for the University of Arizona
Subsection 2B of SB 1070 did not conflict with
Police Department, all UAPD officers have reany federal laws. The question of whether it can
ceived proper training and will be enforcing
“Yes, the law is there, but it can be enforced be applied without racial profiling or whether
Subsection 2B of SB 1070.
in various ways where it might not have an im- racial profiling is illegal in these circumstances
“UAPD has established policies to ensure pact,” Silverman said. “It depends how liberally has yet to be determined by the courts.
the fair and impartial enforcement of the law,” they interpret that phrase or that provision.”
Omar Vasquez, a UA law student and Student
Alvarez said. “Basically the training you receive
Silverman added that the question now is Bar Association representative in the executive
is to make sure that we follow the provisions of whether officers can have “reasonable suspi- board of the Latino Law Student Association,
the law and that’s what we’re going to follow.” cion,” as the law states, without racially pro- questioned the ability of officers to enforce
Andy Silverman, a UA immigration law pro- filing.
SB 1070, 2
fessor emeritus, pointed out that officers will
“I think eventually it might be found to be
STEPHANIE CASANOVA

Racial profiling an exception
for immigration enforcement

“

Enforcement of SB 1070 now
mandated by the state

“

FLAGSTAFF — The Arizona
Board of Regents approved the UA’s
budget proposal for the fiscal year
of 2014, along with the requests for
the two other state universities, in
the board’s meeting on Thursday.
The funding requested is
intended to address a number of
issues including building renewals,
program improvements and the
purchase of tangible resources like
instruments for various research
departments.
The board also addressed a
number of items on the consent
agenda, which was primarily
composed of employee contracts
up for approval. The regents
approved several contracts for a
number of head coaches, many of
whom also received raises.
The regents also approved the
appointment of Andrew Comrie
as vice president of academic
affairs and provost, who will serve
in the position until July 1 of next
year while the UA administration
searches for a replacement.
Comrie is taking the place of
Jacqueline Mok, who left at the
end of the semester. He will return

to really investigate ASA in terms of
how we can improve it,” said Katy
Murray, president of the Associated
Students of the University of Arizona.
“We can definitely improve the
structure to ensure that all three
of the universities have the best
representation and the maximum
collaboration possible.”
Murray also said she would like
to sit down with the directors and
presidents involved in ASA to figure
out the next step. However, she said
she has seen unwillingness from
ASU to do so.
This lack of communication
not only exists between the state
universities, but also within the
universities, according to former
ASA members.
Naufel cited messages exchanged
with current and former members
of ASA and ASUA, describing
discontent with the way the
organization is run.
“I find myself in an awkward
position daily as an active member
of ASUA who disagrees with a lot
of what ASA does,” wrote a current
ASUA member to Naufel. “I have yet
to make my concerns public, but felt
the need to commend you for your
bravery.”
Naufel said he feels his
resignation from ASA has given
him more freedom to advocate for
students and fully explain what ASA
does, as well as where the student
fee goes.
“The fact that I resigned is giving
my students a voice,” Naufel said. “At
the end of the day, when we sat on
the organization, we didn’t feel like
we had much of a voice.”
Some leaders feel this will provide
an opportunity to improve the
overall structure of the organization.
“I agree with ASU in that the
organization ASA can definitely
make improvements,” Murray said.
“I really think that this is the perfect
opportunity for us to work as three
united student governments to make

cece Marshall/ARizona Daily Wildcat

THE ARIZONA STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION , a nonprofit advocacy group, is facing accusations
of wrongfully donating about $100,000 of student fee money to support Proposition 204.

regents
from page 1

to his position as vice president of
research when the year is up.
President Ann Weaver Hart,
during her first regents meeting
since taking office, presented the
UA’s budget request for the fiscal
year of 2013-2014. Hart framed her
request around the mission of the
university, explaining how each
request pertained to and helped
fulfill the mission statement.
Hart requested $8 million to
help further development of the
College of Medicine in Phoenix,
which will go into accreditation
and enrollment.
She then requested $6.3 million
to go to a portion of the university’s
land grant mission, specifically, the
Cooperative Extension Program,
which
provides
educational
programs to people in rural areas
of the state.
“In the 21st century, that
partnership
between
our
states, the counties, the federal
government and the land-grant
universities is critical to fulfilling
our commitment to the counties,”
she said, adding that the program,
as it stands now, is facing “severe
limitations.”
Hart’s third and final request
in
her
decisions
package
presentation was for $40 million
to go toward what she referred to
as “big, bold, bodacious research
instruments.” The instruments
would be operated by the UA, but
shared among other institutions
in an effort to bring other research
groups to the university.
“One of the responsibilities we
have is to provide a resource for
this big, high-quality research that
no single [public institution] could

ever provide with an instrument
that costs far more than any
research grant is ever going to
cover,” she added.
The regents approved budget
proposals for all three state
universities, which will then go to
the governor’s office for another
approval process.
The final portion of the regents’
meeting focused primarily on
Northern Arizona University’s
research presentation, where
they reported to the regents their
research
initiatives
involving
genetic biodiversity.
“We need to spark science
interests throughout the state,” said
Regent LuAnn Leonard, speaking
largely of K-12 areas, and schools
on Native American reservations.
NAU Vice President of Research
William Grabe and his team said
they were working with institutions
throughout the state to further the
research, and were also reaching
out to high schools within the area
to promote interest in scientific
fields.

Legal questions over
funding for Prop 204

A recent investigation by the
Goldwater Institute in response to
the allegations by directors from ASU
has also raised legal questions about
ASA donating funds to the Quality
Education and Jobs Committee,
which supports Proposition 204.
If passed, the proposition would
extend the 1-cent-per-dollar sales
tax used to fund education.
The Goldwater Institute, a conservative nonprofit organization, strives
to “advance freedom and protect the
Constitution,” according to its website. The report, released Thursday,
relies heavily on the testimony of
former ASU campus body president
Joshua Hoyt.
Although the Goldwater Institute
acknowledged that ASA does not
have to get approval from students
before spending funds, the release
accuses ASA officials of ignoring or
violating ASA bylaws.
Former members of ASA disputed
the institute’s report, saying officials
within the organization were aware
of what was happening and that a
majority supported donating money
to the committee.
“There’s one concrete set of facts
and the decision to support this
measure passed our board,” said Dan
Fitzgibbon, former chairman of the
Arizona Students’ Association and a
UA graduate. “The board was being
fully informed of all the involvement
we had with this initiative from day
one. If some people chose not to
participate or not to pay attention
that’s not the fault of anyone else but
themselves.”
The questions raised by the
Goldwater Institute are “just awful,”
Fitzgibbon said. “If given the
opportunity I would make the same
decision again.”
Current ASA members also said
this year’s board unanimously voted
to give $100,000 of ASA’s reserves to
the cause.
“Everything followed the bylaws

monday, october

1, 2012

completely correctly,” said Jordan
King, the vice chairman of the board
of directors and chairman of internal
affairs. “The stance that Goldwater is
taking saying that the money that we
gave didn’t follow our bylaws is not
factual.”
King, a business economics senior,
also said that if ASA were to take a
political stance, the organization
would risk its credibility. The support
for Proposition 204 is something
the organization sees as a benefit to
students, King said.
“Prop. 204 is not a political agenda
campaign, it’s for education, and
we’re solely based on the idea that
education is a non-partisan issue,”
King said. “ASA is a non-partisan
organization and we remain to be
like that.”
Other student leaders on
campus also described a sense of
bias throughout the Goldwater
investigation, due mainly to the fact
that Hoyt was impeached by his own
senate.
“I think it’s really sad that there
were basically no comments from
any directors except ASU,” Murray
said. “I didn’t feel like it adequately
represented the feelings of the entire
board.”
Although ASA will continue to
honor requests by students seeking
refunds for the $2, members are
confident students will look past the
Goldwater report.
“I believe students will see what we
do for them and realize that what’s
reported against us is false,” King
said. “That we follow our bylaws, we
follow every rule and that we don’t
take money from the organization
that is not voted on properly.”
Murray also said students have
supported the organization year
after year and that ASA has given
students a voice on higher levels of
administration.
“I think that’s something students
should keep in mind as well,” Murray
said. “At the end of the day, I strongly
support ASA because this is the only
organization where every single
student is represented.”

Contract approvals

Here are how the salaries break down
for the employee contracts approved
by the board on Thursday:
Head baseball coach Andy Lopez —
$160,000
Head track and field coach Fred
Harvey — $120,000
Head women’s tennis coach Vicky
Maes — $74,000
Head gymnastics coach William
Ryden — $100,000
Head men’s golf coach James
Anderson — $85,000
Vice President of Academic Affairs
and Provost Andrew Comrie —
$300,000

Source: Arizona Board of Regents

Arizona Daily Wildcat file photo

WITH THE NEW “papers, please” provision of SB 1070 now in effect, UAPD officers will undergo training to learn how to properly enforce it.

Arizona’s economy has been affected by the law,
according to Silverman, because groups may have
decided not to hold conferences in Arizona due to
SB 1070 and entrepreneurs may have ruled Arizona
out as a possible place to start, expand or relocate
their business.
“Economically it has had an effect and may continue to have an effect,” Silverman said. “Clearly it
has created fear among non-citizens who live here
or even citizens of color.”
Vasquez said the law is just a scapegoat to
Arizona’s real problems which he listed as the economy, education and employment. Arizona’s failure
to invest in its public infrastructures, deregulation
and tax cuts have led to a shrinking middle class and
flat wages, he said.
Undocumented workers are taking jobs in agriculture, janitorial jobs and jobs that most Americans
don’t apply for, he added.
“I’m not competing with illegal immigrants to be a
lawyer,” Vasquez said. “Illegal immigrants are not coming into this country and ‘stealing’ my lawyer jobs.”
Vasquez added that officers will not be able to
properly execute SB 1070, that the law won’t fix any
of Arizona’s problems and that it’s just a distraction
for Arizona voters to side with Republicans.
“If this is a bill to prevent illegal immigration, it’s
not doing that,” Vasquez said. “It’s not preventing
people from immigrating into the country illegally.
It’s not realistic to think that this law is going to suddenly remove all undocumented persons from the
state of Arizona.”

SB1070

from page 1

the law without racially profiling when deciding if
there’s reasonable suspicion that someone is undocumented.
“If you’re not going to use race, how can you tell
by looking at somebody that they’re an undocumented immigrant?” Vasquez said. “Their clothes?
What kind of car they’re driving? That’s the challenge behind it.”
The general idea that discrimination on the basis of race is unconstitutional is what leads most to
believe that racial profiling is against the law, Chin
said. But SB 1070 states “you can’t take it into account except to the extent permitted by the U.S. or
Arizona constitution,” he said.

Economic and political effects

The law states that its purpose is to “discourage
and deter” people from entering the country unlawfully. While some believe it will be effective, others
say the law won’t really deter illegal immigration in
Arizona.
Silverman said the law is already working and
has been since 2010, because it has created an unwelcoming political climate for immigrants and
Hispanics regardless of their legal status. The
Tucson City Council has tried to address this issue
by saying that Tucson welcomes immigrants into the
community.

The Daily Wildcat
News Tips: 621-3193
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tips from readers. If you see something deserving of coverage, contact news editor Kyle Mittan at news@wildcat.
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How do you think SB 1070 will affect students now that the injunction has been lifted?

“I’m not sure how much it’ll affect
students, I guess because if you’re
going through a college or a school
you can get a student visa, and so
technically you would have papers
to show them. I think just the law
in general is an invasion of privacy
because they don’t have the right
to think that someone is an illegal
immigrant and then tell them to
show them their papers. That’s just
morally wrong.”
— Jeffrey Bragg, engineering
freshman

“It’s going to cause
a lot of bitterness …
I just feel like a lot of
people are going to be
judgmental of other
people and feel like
their privacy is invaded
because of who they
are.”
— Sarah James,
freshman studying
French

“I’m not exactly sure if it will
affect students entirely because they
need to specifically state if they’re a
resident of the country. So, all in all,
I really don’t think that it’s going to
affect them too much. Probably in
the effect that their family might be
sent home, but the student being
sent back, I don’t think so. I’m not a
supporter and I’m not an opposer of
it. It opens jobs for the agricultural
world. Jobs that Americans need.”
— Carly Ehrler, animal science
senior

“I don’t want to
say that students will
be racially profiled, I
mean that’s always a
possibility… Someone
might be inconvenienced
if they get stopped by the
police and asked for their
citizenship status.”
— Jacob Eubanks,
public management and
policy junior

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This isn’t your grandpa’s Wildcat
How we’re working to give you more news when you need it, the way you want it

Old-school system
Read by 2
copy editors,
copy chief

Read by the
content editor

Article

Re-read by the
content editor, a
copy editor, the
copy chief

T

he Supreme Court will soon
hear a case that could shake up
the college admissions process.
Theoretically, affirmative action is
no longer necessary. Perhaps it was
30 or 40 years ago, but society has
evolved beyond discrimination, and
now affirmative action only serves to
discriminate against applicants who
have enough merit but not the right
pigment — or so critics of affirmative
action policies say.
Still, research shows that most minorities, primarily black and Hispanic
students, lag behind their white peers
in college enrollment, retention and
graduation. Evidence also suggests that
race-conscious admissions policies
positively influence college graduation
rates, enrollment in graduate and professional programs and job prospects.
The case, Fisher v. University of
Texas, was filed in 2008 by Abigail
Fisher, a white woman who wanted to
go to the University of Texas, Austin.
After she was rejected, Fisher filed suit,
saying that the university’s inclusion
of race in its admissions process is
unconstitutional.
Lower courts sided with the University of Texas, citing the earlier decision
of Grutter v. Bollinger. The court’s
opinion in the Grutter case established
that a “narrowly tailored use” of race
as a factor in admissions supports a
“compelling interest” in diversity.
Last week, the Obama administration filed an amicus brief in support of
the University of Texas, saying that the
use of race in the admissions process
furthers a “vital interest” of the government. The brief argues that having a
“well-qualified and diverse pool of
university and service-academy graduates of all backgrounds” is critical to the
future labor force.
But Fisher’s lawsuit against the
University of Texas and debate in other
states makes it clear that Grutter, and
earlier cases like Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, did little to
clear up confusion.
States have used ballot initiatives to
remove race-based affirmative action
in college admissions, such as California and Arizona.
Arizona’s Proposition 107, which
passed in 2010, banned the consideration of race, ethnicity or gender by
units of state government, including
public universities.
Prior to Prop 107’s approval, Robert
Shelton, the UA’s president at the time,
vowed to find new ways to recruit
diverse students if the measure passed.
In response, the “Yes on 107”
campaign issued a press release, challenging Shelton to “walk his own talk”
and give his job to someone else. The
campaign argued that, if Shelton was
so interested in increasing diversity,
he would seek it in all positions, unless
he believed “discriminating quotas
should only apply to other people, but
not to him.”
But critics fail to realize two things.
First, people who suspect they are victims of reverse discrimination probably
outnumber people who are actually
victims. Colleges, especially schools
with higher standards, often reject
applicants of all races for reasons that
don’t have anything to do with race.
Second, affirmative action isn’t
about reversing discrimination or its
history. Minority students don’t get a
free pass as reparations for discrimination leveled against their ancestors.
Rather, a university must reflect the
multicultural society that it will send
its students into. Affirmative action is
about making sure that a diversity of
voices — shaped by experience and
identity — contributes to the learning
environment.
There’s no denying that affirmative
action can be risky, as demonstrated by
Princeton University, which is under
federal investigation for allegedly
requiring Asian-Americans to have
stronger test scores and grades than
other applicants. It must be exercised
with caution. But diversity remains a
compelling interest, no matter what
year it is.

— Kristina Bui is the editor-in-chief
for the Daily Wildcat. She can be
reached at letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
or on Twitter via @kbui1.

The Daily Wildcat editorial policy

Daily Wildcat staff editorials represent the
official opinion of the Daily Wildcat staff, which
is determined at staff editorial meetings.
Columns, cartoons, online comments and
letters to the editors represent the opinion of
their author and do not represent the opinion
of the Daily Wildcat.

Read by the
content editor

Read by the
online copy
chief

Bethany
Barnes

DailyWildcat

DailyWildcat

DailyWildcat

Read and put online by the online editor.
Up and ready to read on your phone, tablet
or computer.
Print production continues, and content is
updated as needed.

Arizona Daily Wildcat

T

his week we’re launching a digital redesign. We’ve been
changing our online identity little by little already.
Maybe you’ve noticed. We’re on Facebook more, we
have an Instagram, stuff is online before you see it in the print
edition, the staff box now has online editors and we’ve got a
silly Tumblr. Like I said, small changes.
Going digital is a move we’ve needed to make for a long
time. Online journalism is about more than having a website.
It’s about interaction, and we’re pretty excited about that.
With the relaunch, we’re going to go beyond just giving you
compelling campus stories and updates. We want you to know
that if there’s something going on that you should know about,
we’re going to tell you immediately.
Being online also allows us to be more available. Digital
journalism isn’t just reading articles, it’s a conversation.
The Wildcat should be a resource for you, a way to connect
with your community and stay informed and amused. Here
are a few examples of how we’re working to make the Wildcat
work for you:

Blogs

We’re going to have more content and it’s going to be easier
to find.
Enjoy the Game Freak column you see in the paper? Then
you’ll love the blog that will have freshly updated posts about
the gaming industry. Want to know about the UA’s inner workings? There’ll be a blog for that called “Inside Admin.” Want to
know what the five biggest stories of the day are in the Tucson
area? Our online editors will be posting those, too.

Apps

We know many of you aren’t reading the Wildcat in print
or on your computer. You’re getting the news on your phone
and on a tablet. With our new apps you’ll be able to read the
Wildcat more efficiently from those devices and get updates
when something important happens. When news breaks, it
will actually break — it won’t be something only people that
happen to be on the website or Twitter know about.

Social media

We’re going to be easier to get a hold of. Some of you have
already noticed this.
Wildcat reader Stephen Karpen was unhappy with the
crossword placement, so he sent us messages and photos on
Facebook expressing his frustration (you can see his posts at
dailywildcat.tumblr.com). We listened, wrote back and are
trying to be more conscious of crossword placement. Does it
seem like a silly issue? Maybe. But the crossword is an important part of Karpen’s morning and what’s important to our
readers is important to us.
We’re going to be reaching out more on Facebook, Twitter,
Tumblr, Instagram and Pinterest. We hope you’ll do the same.

— Bethany Barnes is the managing editor and readers’ representative for the Arizona Daily Wildcat. She can be reached at
maned@wildcat.arizona.eduor or on Twitter via @BetsBarnes.
— graphics by Bethany Barnes

CONTACT US | The Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers.
• Email letters to: letters@wildcat.arizona.edu

• Snail mail to: 615 N. Park Ave., Tucson, AZ 85719

• Letters should include name, connection to the university (year, major,
etc.) and contact information.

• Letters should be no longer than 350 words and should refrain from
personal attacks.

MONDAY, OCTOBER

1, 2012 •

5

POLICE BEAT
YAZMINE MOORE
Arizona Daily Wildcat

Dorm drifter does jail

A UA student flagged down two University of Arizona
Police Department officers to report a “creepy” woman .
walking around the area of the Villa Del Puente and ApacheSanta Cruz residence halls at 10:24 p.m. on Sept. 22.
He said the woman had been inside Apache-Santa Cruz
for more than an hour and was making him and the other
residents uncomfortable. The student claimed she came
into the downstairs lounge, and he offered her some pizza.
She had stayed down there for a long period of time, but
eventually left and walked toward La Paz Residence Hall.
Many other students claimed they had seen the woman
inside both Villa del Puente and Apache-Santa Cruz. The
officers notified the resident assistant on duty for ApacheSanta Cruz and radioed the description of the female to
other units.
A few minutes later, two officers responded saying they
were with a female matching their description on the east
side of Arizona Stadium. The male UA student was called to
identify the suspect and said it was the same woman he saw
in his dorm earlier. The woman said she was a UA student
who lived off campus, and that she was just visiting a friend.
She added that she didn’t know the name of the dorm she
was looking for, so she just pointed toward the west side of
the stadium.
The officers looked up the name of the woman’s friend,
but there was no listing of a UA student with that name. One
of the officers asked once again if her friend was a student
and she said yes, but eventually admitted she wasn’t a UA
student.
Throughout the conversation, the woman was vague and
changed her details when the officer asked her questions,
and was eventually arrested on charges of criminal
trespassing. This caused her to become argumentative
and she moved away from the officers and walked around
trying to hide behind one of the other officers at the scene.
When she was searched and put into the patrol car to be
transported to Pima County Jail, she began screaming at the
officers and kicking her feet.

Attempts to spice up night goes
wrong

A UAPD officer responded to Coronado Residence Hall
to check the welfare of a medically distressed UA student at
12:53 a.m. on Sept. 22.
When the officer arrived at the scene, two Arbol de la
Vida Residence Hall roommates were sitting on a concrete
wall west of Coronado. One of the men showed no signs of
alcohol consumption, while the second had red, glassy eyes
and seemed to have trouble focusing. He admitted to the
officer that he had 1 to 2 shots of vodka while at his friend’s
house.
The officer spoke separately with the sober student and
asked him if his roommate used recreational drugs, because
although he had signs of intoxication, he didn’t smell
like alcohol. The roommate admitted that the intoxicated
individual had smoked spice earlier that night.
He said that he had been in his room when his intoxicated
roommate walked in and claimed he needed some cool air.
He was unable to walk around outside safely by himself,
so his sober roommate walked with him. The dorm’s
community director then saw the two individuals and called
UAPD.
The officer told the intoxicated individual that he would
advise the Dean of Students regarding the incident and that
he would contact him later on. The officer wanted to discuss
the student’s use of spice and its negative affects.

Printing stinks. Or
at least it used to.
The new Wireless
Everywhere Print
Anywhere (WEPA)
service will make
things all better.

Download the free WEPA software at

catcash.arizona.edu/wepa
Today
All Day

Accidental door ding blown out of
proportion

A UAPD officer responded to the McKale Center ticket
office in reference to a traffic accident at 4:54 p.m. on Sept.
21. When the officer arrived at the scene, he made contact
with a 46-year-old non-UA affiliated man who said he
accidently “dinged” the front passenger door of another
vehicle as he opened his car door about ten minutes earlier.
He tried to speak with the driver of the Kia Optima, who
was sitting in the driver’s seat talking on the phone, but she
refused to talk with him.
The officer approached the woman and asked if she
was all right. She explained that the driver of the tan Ford
Pickup parked next to her and hit her car door as he exited
his vehicle. The woman said she was on the phone with her
mother at the time, who said she should get his insurance
information. The man waited outside her door to speak with
her and the woman stated that she felt threatened by him, as
he looked annoyed.
When the officer examined her car, he noticed a paint
transfer mark on the passenger door handle that matched
the color of the Ford truck. The officer spoke with a nearby
witness who said the truck driver had accidently hit the Kia
with his car door. The witness said the truck driver patiently
waited for the woman to end her phone conversation and
and that he didn’t ever appear upset or frustrated by the
incident. The truck driver gave his insurance to the woman
and left the scene.

All Day
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4p-5:30p

Campus Events

Faculty Senate Meeting: Monthly meeting
of the Faculty Senate. Current agendas are
usually posted the week preceding the meeting.
3pm-5pm. James E. Rogers College of Law 164.
Weekly Writing Workshop - ‘Style: The
Importance of Clarity’: Victoria Stefani of
the Writing Skills Improvement Program
will discuss “Style: The Importance of
Clarity.” This lecture is part of a semesterlong series of free workshops held every

Sometimes, Wildcats, there’s a genuine buzz on campus. I like to
call this phenomenon “The Not-Really Autumn Buzz.” Side effects
include girls wearing Ugg boots and scarves in 95-degree weather,
or a campus suddenly obsessed with the color copper. I think it’s
safe to say that something is in the air. So read on, the Unions can
help you make sense of this temporary madness.
If you were an employer, you’d totally hire you. You’ve practiced
your elevator speech in the mirror. You’ve mastered the perfect
handshake grip. Eye contact and freshness of breath are mere
child’s play. Well now’s your chance to show off those skills and get
a real job (who cares if you’re picking up coffee and dry cleaning
for the first year). All week from 10:00 – 5:00, Career Services
hosts Campus Interviewing. Come meet employers from across
the country for job and internship opportunities in tech, business,
nonprofits, and government agencies. Repeat after me: “Would you
like cream with that, sir?”

10.02.12

World Cuisines are here! Visit Pangea for Italian, world
fare and sushi! And because the menus change daily,
your taste buds will experience something new every day.
SUMC, Main Level.
CatCash: Take It Off-Campus! Now you can use your
CatCash at select retailers around campus. Go to
catcash.arizona.edu for a list of participating locations.
Treat yourself to Pinkberry! Go ahead, get that swirly
goodness. SUMC, Main Level.
Mas sabor at Sabor! You’ve spoken and we’ve listened!
We’ve amped up the flavor with new marinades and
added items. SUMC, Main Level.
LGBTQA Support Group. Here you’ll find a safe space
for UA students to talk in an open and supportive
environment about issues impacting their lives and the
LGBTQ and Allied community. CSIL, SUMC 4th fl, $FREE.

Monday. Oct. 1. 4pm-5pm. Education 318
Confluencenter Beyond Boundaries
Lecture Series - ‘State Violence, Border
Topologies and the Execution of Law’:
Joseph Pugliese, associate professor in the
Department of Media, Music, Communication
and Cultural Studies at Macquarie University
(Sydney), will reﬂect on the complex relations
between two modalities of state violence: the
contemporary waging of the United States’
international war on terror/al-Qaeda and the
ongoing colonial expropriation and militarization of Native American lands. 5:30pm – 7pm.
Student Union Memorial Center Rincon Room.
Panel Discussion - ‘Sasaki @ ASLA 2012’:
Join us for a presentation focusing on Sasaki’s
work and ideas featured at the American
Society of Landscape Architecture’s annual
conference. This captivating cross-section
of work illustrates the challenges of designing in a contemporary, global context and
the innovative design solutions this ﬁrm has
contributed. Oct. 1. 6pm-8pm. College of
Architecture and Landscape Architecture 103.
UAMA Exhibition - ‘Sol LeWitt Days’: LeWitt,
who stressed the ideas behind his work over
the artistic execution by the artist himself, often
invited other artists and students to assist him
in making his installations. Extending this
tradition to Tucson, LeWitt’s concepts will be

Magic Mike was fun. And who cares if mom didn’t like you watching
it six times (that you told her about)? You and her never did see
eye to eye on those old-fashioned hang-ups about “decency” and
“Leopard banana hammocks.” What was I saying again? Oh yeah,
“The Amazing Spider-Man” starts this Thursday at Gallagher.
Welp, that’s all I got this week, Wildcats. Keep it classy.

Police Beat is compiled from official University of Arizona Police Department reports. A
complete list of UAPD activity can be found at www.uapd.arizona.edu.

McGuire Program Information Session:
The University of Arizona is home to a national leader and globally recognized program
in entrepreneurship – and that program is
open to undergraduate senior, graduate and
doctoral students from the entire University.
The McGuire experience includes ongoing
exposure, interaction and collaboration with
individuals from different backgrounds and
with different areas of expertise and goals.
The McGuire Entrepreneurship program
will give you the training and experience
to apply entrepreneurial principles in any
environment. All interested students must
attend a McGuire Program information session. These sessions will provide information about the McGuire Entrepreneurship
Program, student expectations and the application process. 2pm-3pm. McClelland Hall
202. McGuire Center for Entrepreneurship

union.arizona.edu/spf

World Cuisines are here! Visit Pangea for Italian, world
fare and sushi! And because the menus change daily,
your taste buds will experience something new every day.
SUMC, Main Level.
CatCash: Take It Off-Campus! Now you can use your
CatCash at select retailers around campus. Go to
catcash.arizona.edu for a list of participating locations.
Treat yourself to Pinkberry! Go ahead, get that swirly
goodness. SUMC, Main Level.
Mas sabor at Sabor! You’ve spoken and we’ve listened!
We’ve amped up the flavor with new marinades and
added items. SUMC, Main Level.

Tomorrow
All Day

spaces/places/faces

10.01.12

October 1

Campus Events

constructed by six teams of Tucson artists.
Check UAMA website (http://artmuseum.arizona.edu/) for the schedule of teams and call
520-621-7567 to see if the teams are active.
Event is ongoing until Oct. 21. 5pm. Adults $5;
Children, students with ID, UAMA members,
UA faculty & staff and active military with ID
are free. University of Arizona Museum of Art.

Exhibit - ‘Made in Arizona: Photographs
from the Collection’: To celebrate the Arizona
centennial, a selection of diverse photographs
created in the state during the 20th century
are on display. In addition to iconic views of
iconic sites by photographic masters, this
presentation embraces the unexpected
and shows the rich breadth and scope of
the Center for Creative Photography’s ﬁne
print collection. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
weekdays and 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and
Sundays. Ongoing until Nov. 25. Center for
Creative Photography, 1030 N. Olive Road.
Exhibit - ‘From Here and Far Away: Artist’s
Books, Pages and Paintings’ by Beata
Wehr: This exhibition will consist of artist’s
books and mounted pages as well as encaustic
paintings on the subjects of time, transience,
immigration, memory, human behavior and
place. There will be two kinds of books in the
exhibit: mixed-media using tactile materials
that reinforce content, and others printed in

Campus Events

editions that mostly derive from the ﬁrst group
or are digitally composed. Ongoing until Dec.
7. UA Poetry Center, 1508 E. Helen Street.

In the Wildcats most topsyturvy game this season, Arizona
fell short in a 38-35 loss to No. 18
Oregon State on Saturday night at
Arizona Stadium.
Receiver Austin Hill’s display
of emotions at a post-game press
conference captured the general
state of mind in a game that had
six lead changes, all in the second
half — the last of which came with
1:09 remaining on a 9-yard touchdown pass from OSU’s Sean Mannion to tight end Connor Hamlett.
The game ended when UA quarterback Matt Scott threw an interception on a pass intended for receiver Tyler Slavin to the Beavers’
Rashaad Reynolds.
As he sat at the podium alone,
Hill first fielded questions about
the Wildcats’ struggles to start the
game.
Oregon State jumped out to a
17-0 lead with six minutes remaining in the second quarter.
“It’s tough, you want the momentum to swing your way,” Hill
said, softly. “It’s iust hard when
you go down that early. We did it
against Oklahoma State [in week
two]. We just maybe started a little
late and couldn’t hold it toward
the end.”
Receiver Dan Buckner admitted
that the early struggles came back
to bite the Wildcats.
“Our offense wasn’t clicking,” said Buckner, who had a
team-high 119 receiving yards.
“It’s a game of 60 minutes. Our
team fought hard but you gotta
play a complete game, especially against a team like [Oregon
State].”
Hill lit up when talking about
quarterback Matt Scott, who was
forced to leave the game for a play
in the third quarter after being
tackled onto his shoulder after a
21-yard run.
Scott returned, and after a short
pass to Buckner and a pass interference call on OSU, Scott found

Hill in the end zone for a 3-yard
touchdown, bringing the score to
17-14 early in the second half
“He’s a fighter,” Hill said. “Matt’s
always been a fighter, that’s what I
love about him.”
Scott finished the game completing 31-of-53 passes for 403
yards, three touchdowns and two
interceptions.
Hill started talking about Arizona’s half time adjustments, but
had to take a deep breath before
admitting what went wrong for the
Wildcats.
“We had a lot of mental mistakes,” Hill said. “I don’t know, it
was just rough.”
The most costly mental mistakes
came as a result of two penalties
from safety Jourdon Grandon.
Arizona held a 28-24 lead halfway through the fourth quarter
and Oregon State had the ball at
its own 14. As a result of Grandon
being flagged for unnecessary
roughness and face mask penalties, the Beavers moved 30 yards
up the field and finished the drive
off with Mannion finding Markus
Wheaton for a 20-yard score and a
31-28 lead.
Hill, who had eight receptions
for 74 yards, snared his second
touchdown of the game on the
next drive to put the Wildcats up
35-31, but the Arizona defense
couldn’t contain Mannion (who
passed for 433 yards and three
touchdowns) on the final scoring
drive of the game.
“We knew what they were doing,” linebacker Marquis Flowers
said. “They just executed better.
We gotta do a better job tackling.
But you gotta tip your hats off to
them.”
Arizona’s failure to convert on
its final drive is what disturbed
Hill the most.
“It was tough being in on that final drive,” Hill said, taking another
deep breath. “I fell over on one of
the routes Matt was scrambling
on, that was tough. I don’t know,
I just felt we just gave it up as an
offense at the end.”

LARRY HOGAN/ARIZONA Daily Wildcat
QUARTERBACK MATT SCOTT bounced back after struggling against Oregon last week, passing for 403 yards against the Beavers. But an interception on Arizona’s last drive ended the game for the UA as it dropped its second straight game.

Wildcats fail to overcome
injuries in loss to Beavers
Safety Jared Tevis and center Kyle Quinn had to leave Saturday’s game due to injury and
three other starters, Terrence Miller, Trace Biskin and Reggie Gilbert, were held out as well.
starters? Well if they were, they’d
be the starters. At the same time
I thought they battled pretty good
in there.”
Onwuasor, a converted wide
receiver, was the player called on
to replace Tevis after he couldn’t
return. Onwuasor finished the
game with eight tackles, but
Rodriguez said he went in because
he was just the next player up.

KYLE JOHNSON
Arizona Daily Wildcat

Head coach Rich Rodriguez
admitted during fall camp that the
Wildcats don’t have much depth,
especially on defense. Through
the first four games, the Wildcats
managed to avoid serious injuries
to key players, but that good
fortunate finally ran out Saturday.
On three separate occasions
the training staff needed to help
quarterback Matt Scott, safety
Jared Tevis and center Kyle
Quinn off the field. It’d be hard
to name a group of players more
indispensable for Arizona than
those three.
“[Tevis] is a really good
football player, probably one
of our best defensive players,”
Rodriguez said. “He makes
plays, anybody who watched
him in the first four games saw
that. But the next guy in has to
make plays [as well].”
After the game, Tevis said on
his Twitter account that the injury
looks like a bad ankle sprain but
he is going in for X-rays to verify
the extent of the injury.
Arizona doesn’t release injury
information until Thursday, so
unless Tevis tweets an update,
his availability for Arizona’s
game at No. 18 Stanford is up in
the air.
“Losing a player like Tevis
obviously
hurts,”
linebacker
Marquis Flowers said. “But we
believe in all our players, and
Patrick [Onwuasor] came in and
did a great job.”
But the injury bug didn’t just
bite during the game — it also
made an impact before.
Another senior lineman, right
guard Trace Biskin, didn’t dress

Scott the Warrior

LARRY HOGAN/ARIZONA Daily Wildcat

SAFETY JARED TEVIS is helped off the field in the first quarter of Saturday’s game.

for the game at all and starting
defensive tackle Reggie Gilbert
also wasn’t on the field Saturday
night.
“Whoever’s in there has got to
make the plays … We’re not a real
deep team,” Rodriguez said.
At one point, eight or nine
starters were out of the game,

according to Rodriguez. Scott
quickly returned to action after his
injury, but the losses of Tevis and
Quinn were difficult for a shallow
team like Arizona to overcome.
“The guys who went in that were
backups played really hard, and
I’m proud of them,” Rodriguez
said. “Are they as good as the

Scott went down on his first run
of the night, a 21-yard scramble a
few minutes into the third quarter.
After the play he had to be helped
off the field and receiver Richard
Morrison replaced him for the
next snap.
But
once
Morrison’s
quarterback sneak resulted in no
gain, Scott returned to the field
and injected life back into Arizona
Stadium.
“He’s a warrior, he’s our general
on the offense as well as the team,”
receiver Dan Buckner said. “He
fights through adversity, he’s our
leader. We talk about having a
hard-edge as a team and there’s
no better representation than
[Scott].”
The next 10 plays after Scott
returned changed the score from
a 10-point Beavers lead to a 21-17
advantage for the Wildcats, their
first lead of the night.
“[Scott] has always been a fighter
— that’s what I love about him,”
receiver Austin Hill said. “I was a
little bit worried because I wasn’t
sure what exactly had happened.
But when I saw him back on the
field I was really happy.”
“It did boost moral a bit,” Hill
added. “Seeing your leader come
back onto the field after just
seeing him walk off injured.”

Oregon State head coach Mike
Riley had been saving the play all
night, waiting for the perfect moment to pull the trigger.
“It came out differently than it
ever has, but that’s how we want
it,” Riley said after the Beavers
defeated the UA 38-35 in Arizona
Stadium Saturday night.
Beaver tight end Connor Hamlett was in the right place at the
right time, sneaking behind
Arizona linebacker Sir Thomas
Jackson and catching Sean Mannion’s final touchdown throw of
the night in front of Wildcat safety
Patrick Onwuasor.
With one flick of Mannion’s
wrist, Riley became the all-time
leader in wins as an Oregon State
head coach with 74 in 12 years.
Mannion and Riley knew that
final play would work, because
they had already executed it to
success earlier in the game.
Trailing the Wildcats 28-24
midway through the fourth quarter, Oregon State wide receiver
Markus Wheaton slipped between
UA corner Jonathan McKnight
and safety Jourdon Grandon,
catching his second touchdown
of the game.
“The first look is Markus, but
we ran that play a little tighter
down (in the red zone) than we
normally would,” Riley said of his
decision to run the play a second
time. “I actually screwed it up. I
wanted it out a little higher, but
then we had a good gain, so we
called it anyway.
“I gave them the play call and
said ‘Let’s go score.’”
It should be no surprise that

OREGON STATE, 9

Sports •

monday, october

Arizona Daily Wildcat •

1, 2012

Wildcats lose third straight match
EMI KOMIYA
Arizona Daily Wildcat

The Arizona volleyball team lost
its third straight game while playing
California on Sunday, falling 3-1 (2522, 13-25, 20-25, 14-25).
Head coach Dave Rubio said he’s
beginning to see a pattern from his
team’s inability to close out sets.
“Every match unfolds in a different
way and requires different strategies,”
Rubio said. “I had full expectations
that we were going to be on, and we
were going to be sharp, and we were
going to be good, but we weren’t.”
Rubio is still unsure as to the cause
of the team’s struggles, but noted Cal’s
talent during the game.
“The roles definitely reversed, and
they were good and we were not,” Rubio
said. “I wish I had the answer about why
we weren’t as good, but our execution
was poor in every facet of the game.”
The
Arizona
defense
was
inconsistent,
as
Cal
remained
offensively sound throughout the
match. The only exception came in the
opening set when Arizona took a close
set from the Bears. The Wildcats out-hit
the Bears 17 kills to 12 in the opening
set but could not ride that confidence
into the remainder of the match.
By the fourth set, Cal out-hit
Arizona with a match-high .667 hitting
percentage versus Arizona’s .120
percentage.
“We face these scenarios in practice
and our coaches prepare us well,”
sophomore middle blocker Rachel
Rhoades said. “So we know what to
expect but I don’t think we came out
ready to play.”
Rubio said he just wanted Arizona
to keep the ball in play. He made
more player substitutions than usual
against the Bears, giving freshman

It was a comeback weekend
for the Arizona women’s
soccer team. Unfortunately,
the Wildcats did not manage
to come away with a win after
tying USC on Sunday 1-1 in
double overtime and losing
to No. 3 UCLA 2-1 on Friday.
Even
though
the
Wildcats lost to the Bruins
on Friday, junior forward
and midfielder Jazmin
Ponce’s second half goal
was significant for Arizona
as the Wildcats were the
first team to score on the

UCLA’s goalkeeper Katelyn
Rowland.
Rowland played in four
and a half matches this
season, garnering 16 saves
which were all in shutout
victories for the Bruins.
“Our team learned a
lesson of how we can play
and what we are going to
see in our conference,”
head coach Lisa Oyen
said. “I think the team has
done a good job of learning
lessons, which is a positive
thing.”
On Sunday, the physical

Soccer, 9

kyle wasson/arizona Daily Wildcat

OUTSIDE HITTER Shaquillah Torres attempts to block a hit against Cal on Sunday. The Wildcats lost its
third straight match, and head coach Dave Rubio is running out of answers as to why.

outside hitter Emily Bemis and junior
defensive specialist Emily Kiser
playing time.
Next week Arizona goes on the road
for the first time in conference play to
face the southern California teams,

USC and UCLA.
“I think we all kind of know that our
backs are against the wall here,” junior
libero Candace Nicholson said. “We
just know we need to have a good week
of practice and gain some confidence.”

ROB ALCARAZ/ARIZONA Daily Wildcat

JAZMIN PONCEE (left) is the Wildcats’ leading goal scorer so far, but that
wasn’t enough this weekend as the UA lost to and tied UCLA and USC.

friend
2 friend
notice. care. help.

Watch out for each other...
Keep each other safe...
Be a real friend.

A website for University
of Arizona students that
serves as a resource to
help you help your friends
stay safe and healthy.

Arizona hockey loses Wildcats run to first,
two straight to ASU seventh place finishes
JAMES KELLEY
Arizona Daily Wildcat

The No. 19 Arizona (2-2-0)
hockey team was blown out
11-3 by No. 3 ASU (3-0-0) on
Friday and then on Saturday
lost 4-1. The losses extend
the Wildcats’ winless streak
against the Sun Devils to 26
games.
“We played really terribly
Friday night — a lot of errors,
things like that,” head coach
Sean Hogan said. “Saturday
we played much better, a
much more complete game.”
ASU moved up a spot in
the first regular season poll
released Friday, and with No.
1 Lindenwood losing to No.
14 Central Oklahoma, the
Sun Devils are expected to
rise again.
“I think ASU’s the No. 1
team in the country,” Hogan
said. “We played them really
tight tonight and we’re a team
that’s obviously improving
every day the more games we
play. The more time we get on
the ice, the better we’ll get.”
Sophomore forward and
NCAA transfer Jason Effertz
scored his first goal as a
Wildcat to tie the game midway through the first period
on Saturday. The archrivals
were tied during the first
intermission.

“It feels better. We’re not
happy with a loss, but we
played a lot better,” Hogan said.
ASU took a 3-1 lead in the
second period and scored a
power play goal in the last
period.
“What got us in trouble
is we took a couple dumb
penalties and we’ll deal with
that,” Hogan said. “They
had basically two power
play goals on penalties that
probably could have been
prevented.”
On Saturday, junior goalie
Steven Sisler made his second
start of the year and had 28
saves. On Friday, sophomore
Bob Schultz made his third
start of his career in goal and
made 34 saves.
Hogan said the Wildcats
have a goalie completion “for
sure.”
“Sisler
played
well
[Saturday], made a lot if big
saves,” Hogan said. “There’s
probably two of them that
he wants back, but he
made some big saves for us
tonight.”
Junior
forward
Ansel
Ivens-Anderson,
senior
forward Brian Slugocki and
sophomore forward Mike
Ferreira scored the Wildcat
goals in Friday’s game.
ASU scored 11 goals on 45
shots on Friday, while the
Wildcats had just 25 shots on

goal.
“[Friday night] everybody
was really down,” Hogan said.
“We had a pretty, I would
say loud, video session this
morning.”
The Wildcats trailed 2-0
during the first intermission
and 6-1 after the second
period, and then the wheels
fell off.
“Two things: One, we
obviously didn’t play well,
and I can’t figure out if
Arizona State is really that
good or we really played that
bad,” Hogan said. “Arizona
State is definitely what we
talked about before, on paper,
one of the best teams that I
have ever seen at this level.
They definitely proved that
tonight.”
Ivens-Anderson,
who
transferred
from
NCAA
Division I New Hampshire,
said the Sun Devils would be
competitive in the top flight
of college hockey.
“I think they could be
very competitive with some
Division I teams for sure,”
Ivens-Anderson said. “You
have a Division I transfer
from Canisius [Junior forward
Brian McGinty], a couple
D-III guys. They’re junior
players, they can definitely
compete.”
The Wildcats’ last win over
ASU was in 2009.

LUKE DAVIS
Arizona Daily Wildcat

Arizona’s No. 12 women’s
cross-country team won
the Greater Louisville Cross
Country Classic on Saturday
and the unranked men’s team
finished in seventh-place.
The women earned a
first-place finish in the
5,000-meter race with 71
points. Junior Elvin Kibet
led the Wildcats to victory
in her second consecutive
first-place finish with a
time of 16 minuets and 51
seconds.
Sophomore Nicci Corbin,
senior Jen Bergman, senior
Elizabeth Apgar, and junior
Amanda Russell finished
11th, 12th, 19th, and 28th,
respectively.
“It was tremendous for
our women’s team to come
here and beat all those teams,
especially No. 1 Washington,”
head coach James Li said in a
press release. “It was great for
her [Elvin Kibet]. She stayed
really patient and then took
off the last mile.”
The Wildcats defeated 30
opponents on Saturday, six of

which were ranked. The No.
1 overall ranked Washington
finished in second-place and
No. 8 Vanderbilt claimed sixth
place.
Sophomore
Stephanie
Bulder, junior Erin Menefee,
sophomore Clea Formaz,
junior Melanie McGrath, and
sophomore Molly Callahan
also competed in the race for
the Wildcats but their results
were not factored into the
team score.
“This was a significant
win,” Li said. “It’s still early in
the season but this one gives
us a lot of comfort heading
into the latter part of the year.
If we can keep things like this,
we’ll be in great shape.”
The Arizona men earned
a seventh-place finish in
the 8,000-meter race. The
Wildcats finished with a
total of 236 points. Arizona
sophomore and defending
NCAA individual crosscountry champion Lawi
Lalang, made his 2012 debut
with a first-place finish and
a time of 22 minutes and
33 seconds. Senior Stephen
Sambu finished in secondplace with a time of 22

minuets and 36 seconds.
Sophomore Kenji Bierig,
freshman Nathan Kandie and
sophomore Sam Macaluso
finished 51st, 76th, and 124th
respectively.
Senior Rory McLeod,
sophomore Thomas Valente,
junior James Eichberger and
freshman Christopher Tansey
also ran for Arizona but
results were not factored into
team score.
Li said he was impressed
by Lalang and Sambu’s
accomplishments
on
Saturday for breaking the
course record by nearly 35
seconds.
“Lawi and Stpehen ran
terrific races,” Li said. “They
took charge from the start and
never looked back. They look
really strong.”
Li said he believed the rest
of the men ran a solid race,
but Arizona is still trying
to build the depth of their
roster.
“We still aren’t quite there,”
Li said. “But they did well.
We still need to get our fourth
and fifth guys stronger. When
we do that, the men’s team
will be a contender too.”

THE DAILY WILDCAT

PAC12

LAWI LALANG made his cross country season debut at the Greater Louisville Cross Country Classic. Lalang had a
first-place finish with a time of 22 minutes and 36 seconds.

Feel Like
Part of a Herd?
BECAUSE IT’S FOOTBALL
SEASON AND...

Move into a class of your own.
Visit SUVA to see how studying with a small group of like-minded
artists and designers and learning from working, professional instructors
can give you the competitive edge you need when you graduate.

SUVA is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and welcomes transfer credits.

Hey Ferb, I know what
we’re gunna do today!

We can read today’s
Daily Wildcat!

BECAUSE THIS DOMESTIC CAT
TOLD YOU SO...

The Daily Wildcat
We’re Super

CLASSY

SPORTS •

MONDAY, OCTOBER

1, 2012

ARIZONA DAILY WILDCAT •

Arizona men’s golf finishes
in ninth place in New Mexico
LUKE DAVIS

Arizona Daily Wildcat

The Arizona men’s golf
team finished in ninth-place
on Saturday at the William
H. Tucker Intercollegiate in
Albuquerque, N.M.
The Wildcats finished the
14-team tournament with a
score of 895 (31-over par).
A rough end to the second
round put the Wildcats
in a tough position going
into the final third round,
where they shot a 303 (15over par) and finished the
tournament ninth.
“Finishing ninth was
pretty disappointing,” head
coach Jim Anderson said.
“We know we have guys who
can play. It wasn’t what we
were expecting.”
The Wildcats had a strong
first round and were in
the hunt for a big win, but
couldn’t continue in the
second round pushed them
out of the pack.
“We started off well,”
Anderson said. “But we
wasted some shots in the

second round and didn’t
do well in finishing and
executing.”
Arizona junior Erik Oja
led the Wildcats with an
overall score of 219 and a
10th-place finish. It was his
sixth career top-10 finish
and Arizona’s third top-10
finish in two events this
season.
“Erik did great,” Anderson
said. “We’re going to rely
on him to carry the team
during the season. After
Saturday’s finish, I hope
he can continue to build
confidence which could
lead to a break out season.”
Along with Oja, the
Wildcats lineup included
freshman Dylan Healey,
senior Trent Redfern, senior
Juan Pablo Hernandez and
sophomore Dylan Kornber,
who finished 33rd, 43rd,
51st, and 63rd respectively.
“We’re still trying to find
out what is our best lineup,”
Anderson said. “Individual
performance did well and
we’re getting closer and
closer to the best line.”

UA HEAD COACH
JIM ANDERSON

Anderson
said
he
understands the season is
a process, but with the Pac12 preview right around
the corner the Wildcats
will be up against tougher
opponents. Anderson also
said he wants to make sure
his team better handles
adverse conditions and
plays smarter.
“We got to play more
mentally tough,” Anderson
said. “Sometimes par is a
great score, but we’ve got
to put balls in better spots
to set up par and just play
smart.”

The Daily Wildcat
We’re Super

CLASSY

OREGON STATE
FROM PAGE 6

the Beavers were able to score two times
on the same play, in essentially the same
spot. Mannion and OSU’s receivers were
in sync all night, as Wheaton and Brandin
Cooks combined for 315 receiving yards
and two touchdowns.
Mannion passed for a career high 433
yards and three scores, and found his targets wide-open all night for completions
of 57, 51 and 38 yards against a pass defense that currently ranks 103rd in the nation.
“They had a lot of guys wide open,”
Arizona head coach Rich Rodriguez said.
“When we blitzed, we couldn’t get to
the quarterback, and that makes it really
tough on our defensive backs.
“They give up a lot of yards and a lot of
points, but they try as hard as they can.”
Mannion and the Beavers’ offense had
sputtered to start the second half after
taking a 17-7 halftime lead, but stuck with
the run game, although Arizona had battled back to take the lead, 21-17.
“I’m so hopeful and happy to see that,”
said Riley of his running game, which

SOCCER

FROM PAGE 7

play of the Pac-12 conference came to a
head in the 36th minute of the Wildcats’
match against USC.
“I was happy the team was able to fight
back from the one-goal deficit,” Oyen said.
“USC did a good job coming in getting
the first goal, but we did a good job of
staying composed. Obviously a tie is not
the outcome we want, but it was a good
compromise.”
After an exchange of on-shot goals, USC
entered the attacking zone as April Juarez
passed the ball to Whitney Pitalo. Gabby
Kaufman, Arizona’s kicker, came out to
challenge the play and took a shot to the
face as the ball slowly inched its way into
the back of the net.
Arizona fans shouted in anger that no

racked up 180 yards led by Storm Woods’
161. “It’s been a while. When we play like
that and we have balance, it changes everything.”
The success of the run game led to the
Wildcats’ susceptibility on play-action
passes, which is what led Mannion and
Riley to use the same play for touchdowns
eight minutes apart in the fourth quarter.
Both scores gave the Beavers the lead over
Arizona.
“We had done a good job running the
ball, so we got some good action on it,”
Mannion said. “Everyone knew we had
moved the ball on them pretty much the
whole game. We said ‘We can move it on
them, so let’s go do it.’”
The Beavers needed only 4 minutes, 25
seconds to march 75 yards in 10 plays to take
the final lead of the game, but never strayed
from the balanced approach that kept them
in the game in the second half. On Oregon
State’s final drive, four of the ten plays were
rushes for 23 yards and two first downs.
“We had plenty of time there to do what
we wanted to do,” Riley said. “I’m glad we
could run the ball and keep them off balance. We didn’t quit — we didn’t hang our
heads. [Mannion] showed a lot of poise, as
did the rest of our team tonight.”

foul was called, as the Trojans took the 1-0
lead late in the first half.
Arizona’s offensive line outshot USC
nine to four, but couldn’t connect with the
back of the net.
Kaufman proved herself once again
in the 76th minute of the second half as
USC’s Katie Johnson took on Kaufman
one-on-one.
Kaufman blocked the shot with her
foot giving Arizona a defensive charge
going into the last 15 minutes of the game.
Kaufman recorded a season high of 10
saves against the Trojans.
With just three minutes left in the game,
junior midfielder Jessica Culver scored
her first goal of the season to tie up the
match 1-1, sending it into overtime.
Neither team slowed down on attacks
in the two overtimes, but the ball never
made it in the back of the net as Arizona
ended the weekend with its second tie of
the season.

W A N T E D

RNS!
E
T
N
I

T I P S

F O R

S T A Y I N G

S A F E

Have a pharmacy related question or
concern? Call 621-6516, or
stop by Campus Health.
Our friendly pharmacy
staff is here to help.

CLASSIFIED READER RATES:
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each additional word. 20% discount for five or more consecutive insertions of the same ad during same academic year.

READER AD DEADLINE: Noon, one business day prior to
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are no refunds on canceled ads.

CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE: An additional $2.75 per order will
put your print ad online. Online only: (without purchase
of print ad) $2.75 per day. Friday posting must include
Saturday and Sunday.

2bR HOuSe a/c Washer/Dryer
Fenced yard Close to UofA $575
ALSO 2BR House A/C Carpet
garage Water Included $650
For More Information Please Call
Real Estate Direct, Inc at 520‑623‑
5710 or visit our website at
http://www.azredirentals.com/

!!! 3 -4 beDROOm HOuSe VERy
close to Campus. Available now!
Call for more details Tammy 520‑
398‑5738/ 520‑440‑7711

Attention
Classified
Readers: The Daily
Wildcat screens classified
advertising for misleading or false messages, but
does not guarantee any
ad or any claim. Please
be cautious in answering ads, especially when
you are asked to send
cash, money orders, or
a check.

RATES: $5.00 minimum for 20 words (or less) per insertion. 25¢ each additional word. 20 percent discount for five
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NO REFUNDS ON CANCELED ADS. Deadline: Noon, one business day before publication.

INDIVIDual leaSeS aVaIlable in these incredible houses
located from 1‑5 blocks of Cam‑
pus!
Prices
ranging
from
$300‑$490 per bedroom, with total
access to the whole house. Please
call Tammy for more info 520‑440‑
7711

Publisher’s Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act, which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status or national origin, or
intention to make any such preferences, limitations
or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept
any advertising for real estate which is in violation
of the law. All persons are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

63% of UA students always or usually report using a
condom during intercourse. (2012 Health & Wellness Survey, n=2,406)

Q

Can you have sex in public?

A. Not without legal consequences. Arizona,
like most states, has indecency laws which
apply to any number of “revealing” acts, let
alone sex in public. According to the Arizona
Revised Statutes:
“A person commits public sexual indecency
by intentionally or knowingly engaging in
[sexual contact], if another person is

Q

present, and the defendant is reckless
about whether such other person, as a
reasonable person, would be offended or
alarmed by the act.”
These laws are often enforced vigorously,
so, to preserve your legal standing, as well
as your good name, it’s best to heed some
timeless advice: Get a room!

Can you use plastic wrap
or a balloon as a condom?

A. Some of us pride ourselves on inventive
ways to repurpose everyday objects (you
know who you are). A napkin becomes a
table stabilizer, chewing gum patches a
radiator leak, or hair conditioner serves as
a stand-in for shaving cream. Condoms are
NOT one of the things you want to find
creative replacements for.

leftover lasagna. Bottom line: if you don’t
have the genuine article, it’s best to skip sex.

Yeah, we know, condoms can be expensive.
We’re trying to take away that argument,
though. Here at Campus Health we’re
running Free Condom Fridays each and every
Friday during the semester from 12-2pm.
You can also pick up a pack of 100 condoms
for a mere $14.99 from the CHS Pharmacy
and bill it to your bursar’s. Think of it this
way – at that price, a few
condoms will run you no more
than a couple balloons and
several feet of plastic wrap.

want totalk?

Have a question? Send it to sextalk@email.arizona.edu

NO HEALTH
INSURANCE
NECESSARY

While it’s probably more urban legend than
reality, plastic wrap, balloons, and, yes,
candy bar wrappers make lousy (not to
mention painful) substitutes for the real
thing. Condoms are engineered for sex –
plastic wrap is designed to cover your

Be sure to check out
the Arizona Daily Wildcat
online for this week’s
GAME FREAK

Band Eureka California pull cues from The
Beatles and R.E.M. for their lo-fi sound,
refining their presence on latest album
R.E.M. or Guided By Voices.
Big Cats Can Swim, on the
other hand, sounds much
t started with a bedroom,
more crisp, with Marie Uhler’s
where the often wonderfully
surf drums resounding more
underproduced sound that
distinctly, while Ward integrates
comes with it is undeniably one
both his acoustic 12-string guitar
of the most romantic ideas that
and the clean electric sound from
music has given us since the age
the earlier demos to give more
of rock and roll.
depth and color to the music.
There’s a freedom that exists
“I’d only say the sound evolved
in such a space, which gets to the because I’ve just gotten better at
very core of do-it-yourself music:
recording,” Ward said. “Each time
that anyone can, and should, start I record with a band I get a little
a band. Thankfully, a talented
better.”
young man called Jake Ward
Perhaps the most interesting
heard the call, and started a band sonic quality of Big Cats Can
in his bedroom.
Swim, however is that Ward opted
The band that evolved
to record it in mono, mixing all
from those early days, Eureka
sounds togther by recording
California, is now a full-fledged
through one recording source.
performing group based out of
It’s something Ward attributes
Athens, Ga., that fluctuates in size to the influence that listening to
and membership.
The Beatles’ second album, With
Though Athens is a far cry from The Beatles, had on him during
Tucson, Ward’s commitment to
the recording process.
his craft and recording techniques
It’s a curious reference point —
rings true to poor, dreaming
especially considering the loud
musicians everywhere. Even with fuzz of Big Cats compared to the
the release of their new record Big clean-cut rock on most of With
Cats Can Swim, out on the Athens The Beatles — but it’s a testament
label Happy Happy Birthday To
to Ward’s auditory sensibility that
Me Records, Ward hasn’t had to
the relatively unconventional
change much about his band’s
choice of recording in mono fits
style.
his band so well.
“I still record everything in my
In the end it’s the throwback
bedroom, so that part has stayed
feel and the innovative technique
the same,” Ward says. From the
that makes Eureka California
band’s earliest demos that exist on so special, a band that’s the
its Bandcamp to its more recent
perfect example of what all those
music, there’s a noticeable lack
bedroom bands out there could
of any attempt at putting that
sound like if they just put a little
recording sheen on any track.
heart into it.
Even without using any
In the coming months, Eureka
distortion pedals, the vocals,
California is looking to release
guitar and drums all seem to
new material as well as tour,
blend together and occupy a
taking some time to travel
shared, muddy space — one in
through the midwest and New
which every part of the band
York to play the CMJ Music
contributes equally. Think of early Marathon.
ALEX WHELAN

Cooking up a new
way to blog
Poet and culinary writer Nicole Gulotta mixes both literary sensibilties and
foodie instincts on her feel-good blog Eat This Poem, returning to her roots

good poet gives to their work, to each word
they use, to the music created. Gulotta
started writing poetry when she was 15,
y day, Nicole Gulotta works for a
when a high school teacher fostered her
private foundation that awards
interest, and eventually went on to pursue
grants to nonprofit organizations,
a master’s degree at the Vermont College
but by night she writes, photographs,
of Fine Arts.
designs and edits her blog, “Eat This
“That was all I ever wanted to do,”
Poem.”
Gulotta said. “I had no idea how I would
“It was simultaneously terrifying and
make a living after that, but it was a
exhilarating,” Gulotta said of the transition personal goal of mine that I wanted to
from her blog “Cooking After Five,” to her
accomplish.”
new literary food blog, “Eat This Poem,” in
After graduating, Gulotta let poetry
January of 2012. “It’s a one-woman show.
fade into the background. “It’s always a
I hired a friend to design the logo, but
shock to leave the academic world for
everything else is me.”
the business world, because suddenly
Gulotta’s blog is striking in an unfussy
you’re not writing as much, and you’re
way — quaint, like reading poetry from
not necessarily surrounded by people who
hardbound books while sipping tea. The
share your passion,” Gulotta said. “Writing
straightforward visual line up of the blog
becomes very isolating.”
allows Gulotta’s poem-oriented cooking
This isolation is likely something
posts to do all the work.
many UA students in creative fields
Each post contains a poem and
will experience during school-tothe inspired recipe, along with food
career transitions. For those in creative
preparation photos intermingled with text disciplines, “What are you going to do with
and Gulotta’s thoughts and experiences
that?” is a constant concern.
with the poem/recipe. The introduction to
Many exhaust themselves trying to
each post is eloquently written and asks
explain that there is worth in their study
the reader to think beyond just food or
of poetry, or figure drawing, etc. But
poetry.
ultimately, it’s not about the people who
Gulotta leads the reader on their own
ask those questions, it’s about the artist
journey through earnest storytelling.
finding a balance with their desires and
Sometimes it’s just about how a tiny poem their needs.
can carry a lot of weight.
Gulotta realized it was OK to only write
Readers are able to look up recipes by
one poem a month instead of more, and
charmingly titled meals genres like, “sweet she encourages the rest of us “to just keep
endings” or “bites and nibbles.” Posts are
going.” Her advice is to take each phase of
also searchable by poet, and 28 different
life, embrace it and learn from it, because
authors are listed, including Pablo Neruda, she believes each of these phases has a
Li-Young Lee and Frank O’Hara.
purpose.
Gulotta has collected all of the
She acknowledges that “Eat This Poem”
excerpted poems on a page called
wouldn’t have started if she hadn’t
“bookshelf,” where readers see a collage
gone through “Cooking After Five,” and
of the books each poem was originally
experienced a void when she wasn’t
published in that, when clicked on, lead
working with poetry.
them to Amazon.com where readers can
“I knew it was the right thing to do,” she
buy the original collections.
said. “I loved poetry and writing, then it
It’s evident that “Eat This Poem” has
fell away and I loved food, and eventually
been given the care and attention any
it made sense to bring them together.”
JEANNIE WOOD

Arizona Daily Wildcat

B

COURTESY OF EAT THIS POEM/NICOLE GULOTTA
NICOLE GULOTTA combines poetry and food to produce “Eat This Poem,” a blog dedicated to poems and recipes.